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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn Left leg in the backswing? It's nothing more then a counter balance. |
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn My perspective is a little different. I think the motion of the left leg helps to add leverage to the left shoulder going under the chin, helps to support the weight going to a flexed but stable right leg, and, can help synchronize the hip and shoulder turn, ie. 45 and 90 respectively. |
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn I think you might be confusing "cause" and "affect" here. The left leg shouldn't cause anything to happen. It should be affected by other things happening. |
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn You are mixing cause and affect again. Don't cause your left leg to do anything. Don't make it do this or do that. Don't make it stay in any one place, nor don't make it go to another place. The idea I am trying to help you in, is that if you are thinking about your left leg at all, then you are probably manipulating it to cause another part of the swing to be out of your natural position. Create all the big shoulder turn using your core, not your base. A base it used to balance. Your core is used to generate the rotation and power.
__________________ I'm a golfaholic, no question about that. Counseling wouldn't help me. They'd have to put me in prison, and then I'd talk the warden into building a hole or two and teach him how to play. ~Lee Trevino |
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn Not "mixing" anything. I turn with the core and I do not cause the left leg to do anything. The point I was trying, albeit unsuccessfully in your case, to make was the left leg plays an important part in the swing. Therefore, those who don't allow the left leg to get its natural bending with the knee at or behind the ball, are missing the link to the shoulder turn. With a 90/45 shoulder to hip ratio, I guess I am not missing too much core turning. Lets not pretend I am too much of an idiot and likewise that you are too much of a guru and we will get along just fine. Last time I will attempt to make a point on this DB lest I suffer your hypercritical remarks. Thank you very much. Quote:
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn Reverse pivot or as you call it, fall back, occurs when the weight transfer and shoulder pivot fail. One reason they fail is the player forgets to let his legs move to the beat, like dancing, getting the legs active instead of like two fence posts. Don't underestimate the influence of the legs-like our friend Greg. Quote:
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The importance of the left leg is there, don't get me wrong. Your question was specific about it in the backswing. I focused my responses on this part only. |
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn I find it helps to think of turning the upper chest rather than simply turning the shoulders. A lot of people end up with what I call a fake shoulder turn by not actually rotating the upper body properly. With this, they try to tuck the left shoulder around, almost across the chest, actually narrowing the natural width of the shoulders (as the right shoulder often doesn't move that much). This gets very cramped. Turning the upper chest takes care of the shoulders and, for me, works much better as a concept. I think I should have added that, with the driver, I definitely start with most of my weight on the right side, certainly not 50/50. I do this for the reason that, I think, cmays mentioned somewhere else - it's actually pretty near impossible to shift all your weight back and forth in the swing. I suppose if you're more 50/50 with the driver, you may feel the need to use the left leg more to initiate a big wide turn. Last edited by oldwease; 10-12-2007 at 12:38 PM. |
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| Not to beat a dead horse, but lets discuss the left shoulder getting to where the right shoulder was at address during the backswing. Watching vijay and others, they keep that left bicep almost attached to the left chest wall while turning back in the backswing. When I get wild on my drives its usually that I have come disconnected. Anyone else have the connected/disconnested feeling? Quote:
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| I suppose I am 2.5 versus 2 or 3 because I keep the left bicep close to the body but I also allow the left arm to flex somewhat. Keeping the left arm straight is for younger more supple players who can get the pivot. I am a larger chested larger shoulder person and I let the chest do the backswing bringing the back to the target while keeping the left bicep closer to the body, the right arm in the tray position, and, using the left knee pointing behind the ball which allows the left shoulder to turn under the chin on the backswing. On the forward swing, the right knee kisses the back of the left knee and the right shoulder drives forward under the chin and letting the clubhead pass through while the hands seem to almost stop near my left knee to get the whip going. I don't worry about levers, it would mess my mind up. Good info cmays, I didn't know about the levers differences; it would probably give me too much more to obsess about-my plate is full. Quote:
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| Re: More on driver shoulder turn Cmays, I値l bite, for discussion purposes. Can hand action (and maybe the resulting club movement and self balancing) at the beginning of the takeaway turn the body or at least pressure it to turn? One action I知 thinking of specifically is using the hands to rotate the club shaft counterclockwise about the axis of the shaft (if you were looking at the butt cap of the grip) off the takeaway and maybe to the top. Maybe you would call this "curling" with the left fingers, or revving the motorcycle with the right hand, counter-rotation, a variation on Dante......I don稚 know, but it does several interesting things to the swing. Thoughts? |
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| Although you addressed your post to cmays, I would like to butt in also. Fanning the club is a real no no for most; some can do it but it greatly diminishes the chances of getting back to square. The club opens naturally through the pivot not the hands by themselves. I can hit shots by fanning the club on the bs but man, your timing had better be near perfect; that's why I don't do it as a routine just for kicks. You are asking for all kinds of weird shots with fanning. Quote:
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